Environmenal Issues
Environmenal Issues
SO2
CO
Environmental Concerns
Human health effects:
Atmospheric Emissions
Criteria Air Pollutants: 6 major pollutants
Particulate matter (PM)
Sulfur dioxide (SO2)
Carbon Monoxide (CO) CAA 1963
Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2)
Ground-Level Ozone (O3)
+
CAA 1978
Lead (Pb)
The Clean Air Act (CAA) is the law that defines
EPA's responsibilities for protecting and improving
the nation's air quality and the stratospheric
ozone layer
Ozone (O3)
The ozone at ground level or bad ozone as
opposed to protective atmospheric good ozone
Source: (Transportation, power plants, factories,
etc. that emit NOX and VOCs)
Photochemical reaction of NOX with hydrocarbon
gases (or volatile organic compounds, VOCs) in
the presence of sunlight creates smog.
Health effects:
Extremely reactive oxidant.
Attacks lung tissue
Damages paints and fabrics
Plants cannot produce and store food
Lead (Pb)
A Heavy metal poisonous to human beings at
certain exposure levels
Source:
Automobiles using leaded gasoline
Lead smelting and manufacturing
Lead erosion from water pipes and lead in paints
in old buildings are important sources of lead
release
Health effects:
Damages the nervous system
Affects liver, kidney
Can accumulate in blood, bone and tissues.
Greenhouse gases
Greenhouse gases not yet branded as pollutants
but have indirect environmental impacts.
They trap heat in the same way as a greenhouse.
Sun
Solar radiation
Atmosphere
CO2
CH4
N2O
CFC
PFCs SF6
Infrared radiation
Earth Surface
Water Pollution
Surface water (lakes, streams and rivers, oceans)
subject to evaporation and precipitation
Groundwater (Underground water: aquifers
containing water percolating through earth
surface). It is released naturally through springs
or can be pumped to the surface
Surface water is used in agriculture and industry
Municipal water supplies water for domestic use
Point sources: From specific discharge points such
as sewage treatment plants
Non-point sources: Runoffs from agriculture, erosion
from mining and construction activities, rainfall
Pathogens
Organic waste
Nutrients
Nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) , two essential
nutrients elements widely used in fertilizers and
detergents
They bind to clay particles in soil and enter the
surface waters through runoffs and erosion
They can enter surface waters through household
sewage and wastewater treatment effluents
Increased level of N and P in surface waters cause
eutrophication: excessive growth of algae making
water unable to support fish or other aquatic
species and unusable by human
Toxic metals
Chromium, Cobalt, Iron, Manganese, molybdenum
Vanadium strontium and Zinc: required in trace
levels but toxic at higher concentrations. Same for
heavy metals such as mercury, lead and arsenic.
Sources
Industrial processes such as metal smelting
Runoffs from mining and construction
From pipes in old buildings to municipal sewage
(such as lead)
Atmospheric deposition (such as mercury)
Some toxic metals such as mercury accumulate in
fish tissue and can enter human body.
Acidity
Acidity is due to high concentration of hydrogen
ion (pH<7)
Low pH can impair biological processes and
viability of fish
Source
Acidic wastewaters from industry such as from
mining (such as coal mining releasing sulfurcontaining minerals keading to formation of
sulfuric acid)
Acid rain that can also release toxic metals from
soil
Salts
Compound of elements including calcium,
magnesium, sodium and potassium, producing
positively charged ions (cations)
Cations combine with anions (negative charge)
such as chloride to form salts (such as NaCl)
Salts dissolve in water and measured by total
dissolved solids (TDS)
Source
Natural dissolution of salts into runoffs
Manmade sources into industrial and municipal
discharges and urban runoffs (i.e. deicing of
roads)
Low TDS level is required in drinking water and
water used in agriculture
Heat
Creates thermal pollution
Source
Heat wasted from electric power plant (about half
the fuel energy used) into adjacent water bodies
Can be detrimental to fish and plant by
temperature fluctuations
Warm water has less dissolved O2 and increases
the need for O2 due to increase in biological
activity
nutrients and
bacteria are major
pollutants of
surface waters
Agriculture
industry and urban
runoff the major
sources of
pollutants
Groundwater quality
More focus is on the groundwaters supplying
drinking water
Highest priority pollutants
petroleum compounds from leaking underground
tanks
nitrate from agricultural fertilizers
Also landfills leak toxic metals and organic
compounds to the groundwater
Groundwaters can contaminate surface waters
Soils and ecosystems may remove or assimilate
groundwater contamination
Management of MSW
Radioactive Waste
These wastes are by-products of nuclear fuel
generation.
Two distinguishing aspects of this waste:
- Its harmful effect is by radiation rather than
chemical action
- They remain dangerous for hundreds of
thousands of years
High-Level Waste
The most dangerous waste: spent fuel from nuclear
reactors and highly radioactive liquids and solids
from reprocessing of spent fuel
Require permanent isolation from humans
because of possible fission and emission of
alpha, beta and gamma particles that can destroy
living tissue and cause cancer.
Exposure can be due inhalation, ingestion of
contaminated food or liquid
Indications of this waste: Intensity and half-life
(time required for a radioactive element to decay
to its initial mass).
High-level waste may include elements with short
half-life
Natural resources
- Renewable such as water, wind, solar energy
- Nonrenewable: metals and minerals used in
products and structures, coal, oil, natural gas,
uranium to produce energy
Natural resources are needed by future generations
Increased consumption of nonrenewable resources
not sustainable in long term
Increase of pollution (air, water) and waste
production as a result of increase in consumption of
natural resources
Increase of energy consumption increases the use of
natural resources
Also use of renewable resources has impacts such as:
Loss of forests due to lumber production
Loss of land due to construction of dams
Biodiversity
Variations in different living organisms such as
animals and plants in an ecosystem required for a
healthy ecosystem.
Loss of species affects function and balance of
ecosystem as well as human population (most
medicines are from plants)
500 species in the US are extinct: birds, fish, plants,
etc.
Endangered Species Act (1973) in the US to save
threatened species
UN and other organizations have programs to
protect biodiversity
Loss of Habitat
Loss of biodiversity is directly linked to the